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Brexit ‘Leave’ campaign built victory on arguments against EU
“The 350 million pounds a week we send to the European Union, which we will no longer send to the European Union, can you guarantee that’s going to go to the [National Health Service]”, ITV’s Susanna Reid asked one of the major proponents of the Leave campaign Friday morning.
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Farage responded that the contribution – which he said was more than £350m a week – could be spent on public services including “the NHS, schools or whatever it is”.
Nigel Farage has suggested that Boris Johnson, Michael Gove or Liam Fox would be potential leadership contenders for a ” Brexit Prime Minister”.
You’re saying after 17 million people have voted for Leave, based – I don’t know how many people voted on the basis of that advert, but that was a huge part of the propaganda – you’re now saying that’s a mistake?
“That’s why people – many people – voted!” she said incredulously.
One of the chief architects of the #Leave movement was Nigel Farage, a British politician and head of the UK Independence Party. “Because if you do… they just stop believing you”.
The European Unity forged since the World War II also got a body blow with the decision of Britain while repercussion was felt in other European countries too especially emboldening groups like the resurgent far-right National Front party of France.
“The exciting thing is we can do more globally and we are going to be better off as a result of this”. Farage insisted that though he couldn’t guarantee where the money would go, it would be extra money into Britain’s economy that otherwise would’ve gone to the EU.
While Prime Minister David Cameron fought for a “special status” that exempts the United Kingdom from numerous European Union laws, Johnson warned in May that the European Union was the latest manifestation of a 2,000-year project to unify Europe under a single government. “We’ve won the vote to become an independent nation, we now need to make sure it actually does happen”. So when we got to 10 o’clock last night I nearly dared not to hope that what I’ve dreamed of would happen.
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“The world doesn’t listen to him”, Trump said.